• This noble war in the sky

    This seemingly offhand sentimentalism is in actuality an exceedingly subtle move on
    Mary Shelley's part, suggestive of how dangerous unexamined metaphors can be, especially
    those that stem from our day-to-day existence and common practices. Victor Frankenstein,
    deeply aware from his scientific experiments that electricity achieves its dynamic
    energy from the interplay of polarities, here sees in the heavens an example of that
    polarity writ large and, as it were, iconically—as elemental warfare. He will almost
    immediately transfer that icon into an earthly counterpart, a permanent struggle between
    positive and negative poles, by which he respectively denominates himself and his
    Creature as good and evil, as figures of God and Satan. Thus, almost unconsciously
    adopting a quasi-divine sign, Victor reinforces the animosity that allowed him conveniently
    to categorize, externalize, and thus alienate as Other the Creature whom he brought
    to life and then left to his own devices (see I:4:3 and note).